adamsgaard.dk

my academic webpage
git clone git://src.adamsgaard.dk/adamsgaard.dk # fast
git clone https://src.adamsgaard.dk/adamsgaard.dk.git # slow
Log | Files | Refs | README | LICENSE Back to index

011-james.html (2610B)


      1 <p>Considerable areas of the polar oceans are covered by sea ice,
      2 formed by frozen sea water. The extent and thickness of the ice
      3 pack influences local and regional ecology and climate. The ice
      4 thickness is particularly important for the ice-cover survival
      5 during warm summers. Wind and ocean currents compress and shear the
      6 sea ice, and can break and stack ice into ridges. Current sea ice
      7 models assume that the ice becomes increasingly rigid as ridges of
      8 ice rubble grow. Modeling sea ice as bonded particles, we show that
      9 ice becomes significantly weaker right after the onset of ridge
     10 building. We introduce a mathematical framework that allows these
     11 physical processes to be included in large-scale models.</p>
     12 
     13 <p>Today a new paper of mine is published in the AGU-group journal
     14 <a href="https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/19422466">Journal
     15 of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems</a>, and it is written with
     16 co-authors <a href="https://scholar.princeton.edu/aos_sergienko/home">Olga
     17 Sergienko</a> and <a
     18 href="https://www.gfdl.noaa.gov/alistair-adcroft-homepage/">Alistair
     19 Adcroft</a> at Princeton University (New Jersey, USA).  I use my
     20 program <a href="https://src.adamsgaard.dk/Granular.jl">Granular.jl</a>
     21 for the simulations.</p>
     22 
     23 <h2>Abstract</h2>
     24 <blockquote>
     25 <b>The Effects of Ice Floe-Floe Interactions on Pressure Ridging in Sea Ice
     26 </b>
     27 <br><br>
     28 The mechanical interactions between ice floes in the polar sea-ice
     29 packs play an important role in the state and predictability of the
     30 sea-ice cover. We use a Lagrangian-based numerical model to investigate
     31 such floe-floe interactions. Our simulations show that elastic and
     32 reversible deformation offers significant resistance to compression
     33 before ice floes yield with brittle failure. Compressional strength
     34 dramatically decreases once pressure ridges start to form, which
     35 implies that thicker sea ice is not necessarily stronger than thinner
     36 ice. The mechanical transition is not accounted for in most current
     37 sea-ice models that describe ice strength by thickness alone. We
     38 propose a parameterization that describes failure mechanics from
     39 fracture toughness and Coulomb sliding, improving the representation
     40 of ridge building dynamics in particle-based and continuum sea-ice
     41 models.
     42 </blockquote>
     43 
     44 <h2>Links and references:</h2>
     45 <ul>
     46 	<li><a href="https://doi.org/10.1029/2020MS002336">Publication on journal webpage</a> (open access)</li>
     47 	<li><a href="https://src.adamsgaard.dk/seaice-experiments">Source code for producing figures</a></li>
     48 	<li><a href="https://src.adamsgaard.dk/Granular.jl">Simulation software</a></li>
     49 </ul>